Photo image of scanned scrapbook page. Pictured: the Portsmouth Shoe Factory; Officers and Salesmen of the Irving Drew Co. starting on an outing after the semi-annual conference
Scanned page 70 from Henry A. Lorberg scrapbook containing black & white images of Portsmouth Shoe Manufactory at 127 W. Front St.' Rev. J. D. Herron and an unidentified girl; Jacob Miller, Ed. The Life Boat 1848; and The Fellowship Club. A newspaper clipping listing the graduating class of 1883: Grace Cotton, Alice Comins, Hattie Dennison, Ida Dever, Minta Edwards, Dora Gower, Grace Helfenstein, Anna Horr, Seva Keefe, Nellie O'Connor, Carrie Zottman, Sarah Meyers, George Dennis, and Edwin Stone.
Photo image of scanned scrapbook page. Pictured is the Portsmouth Shoe Manufacturing Company. It was started in 1873 by the Robert Bell's son in law, and listed in the directories at 105 West Front Street. Cut from Portsmouth Pictorial book, the Market Street Arcade.
Scanned scrapbook page: typed detailing some social events in the county and some people that were involved with them. Also, at the top of the page is the end of a story about the Indian Head Rock in the Ohio River
Tarnished, silver token for "Portsmouth Solvay Coke Co. Inc." On same side, "1.00" and "Freeburn". Other side: "Insurance credit system, Dayton, Ohio." "Intrade." Diamond shape with balance scale. Odd-shaped hole punched. The Portsmouth Solvay Coke company, M.K. Hitchcock, Traffic Manager, 42-43 First National Bank Building. On June 1, 1917, the Turkey Gap Coal and Coke Company was purchased by the Portsmouth Solvay Coke Company to supply the ovens at its new by-product coking plant at Portsmouth. The Freeburn mine in Pike County Kentucky furnished high-grade by-product coal to the coke ovens at Portsmouth. In 1921 the American Rolling Mill Company and the Whitaker-Glessner Company jointly acquired all the capital stock of the Portsmouth Solvay Company and changed the name to the Portsmouth By-Product Coke Company.
Green, yellow and white paper pamphlet with "Portsmouth Song, Dedicated to the Pageant of Portsmouth, September of 1922." Yellow floral illustration with figures. Inside is the song with music.